Broadcom's 2023 acquisition of VMware and the subsequent forced migration to VMware Cloud Foundation subscriptions created the largest involuntary cost increase in enterprise infrastructure history. Many customers are facing 3–5× price increases on products they have used for a decade. Our advisors know VMware's commercial architecture from the inside — and we know how to challenge Broadcom's transition proposals, protect perpetual licence rights, and build alternatives that restore balance to your infrastructure strategy.
Broadcom's post-acquisition strategy has been executed with a precision that reflects its core competency: identifying technology platforms with high customer switching costs and restructuring their commercial models to maximise short-term extraction. The termination of perpetual licensing, the elimination of individual product SKUs, and the mandatory consolidation into VMware Cloud Foundation (VCF) bundles represent a deliberate strategy to remove the optionality that customers previously used to negotiate effectively.
However, Broadcom's strategy has also created significant legal and commercial vulnerabilities that well-advised customers can exploit. Perpetual licences carry contractual rights that Broadcom cannot unilaterally revoke. Support obligations under existing agreements continue even as Broadcom attempts to migrate customers to subscription. Regulatory scrutiny in multiple jurisdictions has created additional leverage points that sophisticated buyers can deploy in negotiations.
The most important insight we bring to every VMware Broadcom engagement is this: Broadcom's commercial team is under enormous pressure to convert perpetual customers to subscription by the end of each fiscal year, and that pressure — combined with the credible threat of migration to alternatives — creates genuine negotiating leverage that most customers are not using. We have helped customers in every sector significantly reduce VCF transition costs by deploying these levers methodically.
Broadcom's VMware Cloud Foundation subscription is the product into which all VMware customers are being migrated. VCF pricing is based on cores — and Broadcom's initial proposals typically include core counts that significantly exceed actual deployment requirements. VCF also bundles components that many customers do not use and will never deploy, inflating the apparent per-unit price relative to what customers actually need.
VMware perpetual licences purchased before Broadcom's acquisition carry contractual rights that survive the change of ownership. Customers with perpetual vSphere, vSAN, NSX, and vCenter licences are entitled to continue using those products and to receive support under the terms of their original agreements. Broadcom's attempts to discontinue perpetual support, reclassify maintenance entitlements, and pressure customers into subscription through support degradation strategies can be challenged legally and commercially.
The most powerful negotiating leverage against Broadcom's VCF pricing is a credible and costed alternative — whether that is migration to a hyperscaler (AWS, Azure, or GCP), adoption of an alternative hypervisor platform (Nutanix, Red Hat Virtualization, or Microsoft Hyper-V), or a hybrid architecture that reduces VMware dependency. Broadcom's commercial team responds to credible competitive alternatives in ways it does not respond to negotiation posturing alone. We build and present these alternatives as part of every VMware engagement.
Customers with existing vSphere Foundation and VMware vSAN subscriptions or support renewals are in a different commercial position than perpetual licence holders migrating to VCF for the first time. vSphere Foundation renewals are subject to Broadcom's new pricing architecture but retain more negotiating flexibility than VCF first-time conversions. We handle vSphere Foundation and vSAN subscription renewals as standalone negotiations, often achieving 25–40% reductions on Broadcom's initial renewal quotes.
VMware Cloud on AWS (VMC on AWS) — the jointly operated service between VMware and AWS — is now subject to Broadcom pricing changes that are distinct from both VCF on-premises pricing and standard AWS billing. VMC on AWS pricing has increased significantly under Broadcom, and the commercial terms governing VMC agreements differ materially from both Broadcom's direct VCF agreements and AWS enterprise discount programs. We negotiate VMC on AWS pricing as a distinct commercial exercise with specific levers unavailable in standard VMware negotiations.
VMware NSX (network virtualisation) and Tanzu (Kubernetes platform) are among VMware's highest-margin products and the areas where Broadcom has applied the most aggressive pricing pressure post-acquisition. NSX-T pricing has increased substantially under the VCF bundling model, and customers who previously purchased NSX as a standalone product are being forced into VCF bundles to maintain NSX support. We conduct NSX and Tanzu component-level pricing reviews and identify legitimate alternatives to Broadcom's all-or-nothing bundle approach.
Broadcom has set internal targets for converting VMware perpetual customers to VCF subscription by specific dates, and its field sales organisation is compensated heavily on conversion volume — not on the price achieved. This creates a situation where Broadcom's account teams often have authority to discount VCF subscriptions by 30–50% from list price when faced with a credible alternative or a delayed conversion timeline. Most customers do not know this because Broadcom's initial proposals are presented as non-negotiable. They are not. We have never seen a Broadcom VCF proposal that could not be improved by 25% or more through structured negotiation.
Broadcom's standard VCF conversion proposal offers customers credit for their perpetual licences at a value that Broadcom determines internally — and that value is typically set well below what the perpetual licence would justify based on remaining useful life and contractual support entitlements. We conduct independent assessments of perpetual licence value using the methodology courts have used in software licence disputes, and we use that analysis to challenge Broadcom's conversion credit calculations. In most cases, customers are entitled to 40–70% more transition credit than Broadcom's initial proposal reflects.
Broadcom closes its fiscal year on October 31 — earlier than most enterprise technology vendors. October is therefore both the period of maximum commercial pressure for Broadcom's field teams and the window of greatest pricing flexibility. Customers who time their VCF negotiation to conclude between August and mid-October, with a credible alternative ready to deploy and a defined decision timeline, consistently achieve better pricing than those who negotiate outside this window. Broadcom's post-fiscal-year-end commercial posture is significantly more rigid than during the Q4 conversion push.
Broadcom's VMware pricing strategy has attracted regulatory attention from competition authorities in the European Union, United Kingdom, and United States. The EU's Digital Markets Act creates potential avenues for challenging Broadcom's forced bundling practices, and several national competition authorities have opened preliminary inquiries into Broadcom's post-acquisition commercial conduct. While regulatory proceedings are slow, the existence of regulatory scrutiny has created a compliance risk for Broadcom that well-advised customers can reference in commercial negotiations — signalling that their situation may be escalated to regulators if commercial resolution is not achieved. We advise on how to deploy this leverage appropriately and effectively.
"Broadcom told us our perpetual licences were worthless and that we had to convert to VCF on their timeline at their price. The Negotiation Experts showed us we had far more rights than Broadcom claimed — and far more options than we realised. We saved $11 million and still run our infrastructure the way we choose."— CTO, Global Insurance Group
The complete guide to navigating Broadcom's VCF transition — perpetual licence rights, VCF pricing negotiation, alternative platform evaluation, and regulatory leverage. Written by former VMware commercial executives.
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